Day / September 28, 2017

On this date in 1967, the Beatles worked to complete the recording of the song I Am the Walrus. Known for their innovative work in the studio, the group on this day did something truly unique, blending the conclusion of their new song with a BBC recording Shakespeare’s King Lear.

In addition to the Bard, the Beatles also drew inspiration from two other poetic sources. One was Lewis Carroll’s poem “The Walrus and the Carpenter,” which inspired the song’s title and it plentiful use of nonsense lyrics. The second was a playful nursery rhyme that they remembered from their childhood in Liverpool:

Yellow matter custard, green slop pie,

All mixed together with a dead dog’s eye,

Slap it on a butty, ten foot thick,

Then wash it all down with a cup of cold sick.

This bit of rather grotesque verse inspired the colorful lyric: “Yellow matter custard, dripping from a dead dog’s eye.”

The Beatles had no name for their process of creative synthesis, and they were so ahead of their time that they really didn’t need one. Today, however, we have a name for it; it’s called a “mash-up.”

According to Newsweek, the word “mashup” was coined in 2001 by DJ Freelance Hellraiser who used Christina Aguilera’s vocals from ‘Genie in a Bottle’ and “recorded [them] over the instrumentals from ‘Hard to Explain.’”

Mash-ups are certainly not limited to musical, however. A mashup applies to any combination of two or more forms of media: music, film, television, computer program, etc. As seen by the examples below, these creative combos synthesize just about every imaginable form of media:

Sense and Sensibility and Seamonsters– a book mashup that combines classic fiction and sea stories.

The Dark Side of Oz – a film mashup pairing Pink Floyd’s classic album The Dark Side of the Moon with the visuals of the film The Wizard of Oz.

Star Wars: Invasion Los Angeles: a computer animated video created by Kaipo Jones that sets the intergalactic battle from the film Star Wars among the familiar and famous sites of Los Angeles.

TwitterMap – an internet mashup that combines Twitter and Google Maps to create a visual map of Tweets.

Today’s Challenge: Mother Tongue LashingWhat one word fits between the words ‘Jelly’ and ‘Bag’ to form two separate compound words? Jelly __________ Bag The answer is the word “bean” as in jelly bean and beanbag. This is a type of lexical mash-up called Mother Tongue Lashing. It takes advantage of the wealth of compound words and expressions in English. For each pair of words below, name a word that can follow the first word and precede the second one to complete a compound word or a familiar two-word phrase.

Life __________ Travel

Punk __________ Candy

Green _________ Space

Rest __________ Work

Word __________ Book

Rock __________ Dust

Spelling __________ Sting

Night __________ House

Now, create your own list of 8 Mother Tongue Lashings. Use a dictionary to make sure that you have two-word expressions or compound words, not just two-word combinations.

Quotation of the Day:We were all on this ship in the sixties, our generation, a ship going to discover the New World. And the Beatles were in the crow’s nest of that ship. -John Lennon

On this date in 1768, Benjamin Franklin — founding father, diplomat, printer, scientist, writer, and civic reformer — wrote a letter making his case for spelling reform.

Many know about his inventions, such as the lightning rod, bifocals, and the Franklin stove, but not many know about his attempt to eliminate six letters of the English alphabet and replace them with six of his own invention.

Franklin’s chief concern, like many who came both before and after him, was the confusing discrepancy in English between its sounds and its alphabet: “The difficulty of learning to spell well . . . is so great, that few attain it, thousands and thousands writing on to old age without ever being able to acquire it” (1).

To correct the imperfections in the English alphabet, Franklin proposed throwing out the six letters C, J, Q, W, X, and Y and replacing them with six new letters of his own, letters which would represent the six sounds found in the following words:

law, caught

run, enough

this, breathe

singer, ring

she, sure, emotion, leash

thing, breath (2)

In his letter Franklin addresses objections to his spelling reform scheme. One was that books published before the reforms were implemented would become useless. To rebut this Franklin asked his reader to consider a similar case in Italy: “Formerly, its inhabitants all spoke and wrote in Latin; as the language changed, the spelling followed it.” Another objection addressed by Franklin was that of etymology – or word history –, particularly the historic roots of words that are preserved in their orthography (the way they are spelled). To this objection, Franklin responded with the following apt example:

If I should call a man a knave and a villain, he would hardly be satisfied with my telling him that one of the words originally signified only a lad or servant; and the other an under-ploughman, or the inhabitant of a village. It is from present usage only, that the meaning of words is to be determined.

Although Franklin’s arguments are convincing, his reform plan never came to fruition. Perhaps he was sidetracked by his other possibly more important role as midwife to the birth of the world’s first great democracy. Not until Noah Webster’s An American Dictionary of the English Language, published in 1828, did spelling in the United States see much reform.

Today’s Challenge: The Case for X ReformGreat people like Benjamin Franklin demonstrate the power of ideas, ideas for making their town, state, country, or world a better place. What do you see in your world that should be reformed, and how specifically would you propose to make it better? Argue your case by addressing the current problem, followed by a specific vision of how your reforms would improve the situation. (Common Core Writing 1 – Argument)

Quotation of the Day: Attempting to spell in English is like playing one of those computer games where, no matter what, you will lose eventually. If some evil mage has performed vile magic on our tongue, he should be bunged into gaol for his nefarious goal (and if you still need convincing of how inconsistent English pronunciation is, just read that last sentence out loud). -James Harbeck